.Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 26, 19-1 # Il 6 na CC II GEO faces tough battle on demands i MOVING SALE! 20% Off ALL MERCHANDISE &g THE 9A £op 316 SOUTH STATE STREET 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat,; 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. (Continued from Page 1) the purpose of our proposal is that a TA be able to live on a quarter - time appointment. I don't think that's something to laugh at," Hoyman said. Another key issue under close University scrutiny was the GEO demand for a tuition waiver. The demand is based on the claim that since a teaching fel- low must go to-school, his tui- tion payments are, in effect, a tax on employment and should be removed. BUT THE University was wary of the cost involved. University negotiator Harold Jacobson objected to the cost of the proposal pointing out that it would cost the University $27,000 to lure tour part time out of state teaching fellows to, do- the work of one full time professor, who would be paid only $23,000. "From our point of view, it's going to cost us the $27,000," GEO's Hoyman replied. The two sides came to agree- ment on a relatively minor de- mand that the University pro- vide the GEO information nec- essary for use in contract talks. But a dispute as to when the article would take effect fur- ther increased tension between the two sides. THE GEO had been under the impression that it would take effect immediately enabling them to purchase preaddressed mailing labels from the Uni- .versity. But the University, apologiz- ing if they had misled the union, stated that they were unwill- ing to enact any part of the contract until all of it had been signed. The University set a tentaive reply date to the GEO econom- ic demands of November 8. Aft- er this, the Union will set a strike deadline which could come as early as February. Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558- Ozone Homecoming Parade dazzles, baffles spectators (Continued from Page 1) parade, jumped into the air ing, and the Maximum Thril and a skateboard impressario, gleefully. "This is the happiest Award, given to the Frien a car representing the ,co-ed moment of my life," he said. Road Show for their crow fraternity, Theta Xi, a walking shocking performance of fire clasp purse, and the Martian THE AWARD for Best Cos- eating. Entropy Band, composed of tume was won hands down by CROWD REACTION to th green-tinged a n d silver-nosed the walking clasp purse, with musicians. t an Honorable Mention given to parade was overwhelmingly fas The distinguished panel of a green-clothed m a r c h i - g orable. "It's sheer madness Ozone Parade judges, headed "greenback." Penny Yohn, the said one midterm - beleagur by State Representative Perry creator and inhabitant of the junior. Bullard, awarded the first prize prize-winning purse costume, is An onlooking policeman wa (a tour of the Stroh's brewery) a purse collector and owner skeptical. It is interesting, to a float showing humans im- of a local antique shop. he mused. '"But I miss the of t 3 a prisoned in a stony bank. Win- ning the prize for Best Group, the Blind Pig float was awarded enough banana bread to fLed all its members. On the greenish members of the Martian Entropy Band, up- on being informed that his group had won a sweet potato pie for being the Most Original in the "it was natural for me to enter when I heard the theme," she said, still stunned by her victory. Yohn's prize for her creative effort is a six course Chinese dinner, cooked i her own home. Pursing her lips in expectation, Yohn walked home, presumably to change. Other awards given were the S.O.S. (Special Ozone Salut ) to the Human Rights Party for their pitch for preferential vot- parades wat tnarcnmg an and Kleenex floats and prett girls waving. The only perso who waved at me today wa some guy in drag." "The entire thing is so di sonant," said a rabbit-suite marcher. "T h e Homecomin Parade itself is so traditiona yet the theme is so blatantl lunatic. Everybody who partic pates in this and everyone wh watches it really belongs to Th Home." Sugar profits triple as prices skyrocket NEW YORK (P) - Amstar Corp., the nation's biggest man- ufacturer of sugar and sugar products, said yesterday it more than tripled its third-quarter profits from last year. The company said it earned $16.71 million or $4.26 a share in the quarter, more than three times the $5.10 million or $1.20 a share it earned a year earlier. Quarterly sales more than d o u b l e d to $544.37 million against $221.53 million in 1973. Higher selling p r i c e s and greater volume of sales were behind the results, Amstar said. Defending recent price in- creases in refined sugar to the consumer A m s t a r President Robert Quittmeyer said, "Over 80 per cent of the price of the finished cane sugar products re- flects the cost of our basic raw material, raw cane sugar, and the cost of this product has sky- rocketed." I - Black culture. fest r opens at East l By JIM TOBIN Abeng is I "When you see two or three ganizationo hundred students in a lecture by the Univ and only two or three otherjby the Coal black faces, you need something Learning Sk to come home to," says Lois the Residen Berrien, publicity chairman for Abeng me the Black Arts and Culture Fes- festival to b tival this weekend. important c The festival is sponsored by awareness.F East Quad's black student or- better cros ganization, Abeng, which takes will bring ms name from the horn used in Ja- the first fes maica to call black slaves home The even at the end of the day. held todayn ' Quad's ma AND IT is this home which such attrac Abeng seeks to provide for its creative art around fifty black student mem- Kwon Do d bers. fraternity The organization, founded sev- plays, a win eral years ago, offers minority featuring th counseling, academic counsel- day will fe ing, and information concern- ary fashion ing political and social events poetry rea which would concern the black i exhibition b community. dancers. Quac, the only black of officially recognize versity, funded bot ition for the Use c kills (C.U.L.S.), an tial College. - embers consider t be one of their mo ontributions to ba Berrien expects tha s-campus publicit ore attendance tha tival last year. t, which is bein and Sunday on Eat in floe:, feature tions as photo an exhibitions, a T emonstration, blac and sorority dih he sip, and a danc e Unity Band. Sur ature a contempoi show, a play, ding, and a danc y the Trotter Hous h:". e;You'll sail in 1February, with the ship your class- room and the world your campus . .. combining ac- credited studies with fasci- ntng visits to the fabled port oftheOrient, Africa, and the Americas. Over 10,000 students from 450 ,..,. colleges have already sailed -with WCA - join them! Fi- nancial aid available. Write .{ today for free catalog. WCA, Chapman College BoxF, Orange, CA 92666 PEOPLE Conversation and Entertainment at The Hillel Coffee House Saturday, October 26 Refreshment & Entertainment provided Mogdis backs Weaver (Continued from Page 1) leagues and party cohorts di party members. enchanted. In additibn to his unsuccessful In August, for instance, Bu run at the mayor's office, Mog- lard faced opposition in th dis lost as a candidate for City Democratic primary f r on Council a year earlier. He has Washtenatw County Commit served on the city's planning sioner Elizabeth Taylor (Ij commission - an appointive Ann Arbor). position. But Bullard said he "feels i close accord with the bulk o BULLARD, since his election the party" because he. addresse to the legislature, has developed "traditional Demotratic cor a nonconformist image that has cerns of graduated income ta left some of his House col- and economic justice." 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